Physicians
in sentence
226 examples of Physicians in a sentence
But this part of the equation I didn't really get, and I don't think my
physicians
really get this part of the equation.
Okay, number one is, we must teach
physicians
about the value of geographical information.
In fact, so low that
physicians
will not have to lower or dim the metabolism of people much at all to see the benefit I just mentioned, which is a wonderful thing, if you're thinking about adopting this.
Second, the absurdity of these three as
physicians
in a hospital; I imagine the terror I would feel if I were a real patient in a real hospital and heard this announcement over the loudspeaker.
Take a well-know genius you have not read, describe him as demented, include crazy
physicians
to cure him, a couple of somewhat good looking women, have his role played by an actor with an enormous mustache, have every character speak with the strongest accent, show ridiculous dreams, include another prestigious figure who has nothing to do with the first one (Freud), mention a few words used in the genius' works, overdo everything you can, particularly music, and you are done.
It examined several relationships among physicians, African Americans, and African American male/female romantic relationships on a completely new and refreshing level.
We often focus on health care and emphasize the roles of medicine and
physicians.
A federally financed research team of
physicians
and health-care economists examined hospital records and other clinical information and also spoke with the enrollees and with those not admitted.
After all, we already have many highly trained people to examine subjects, namely
physicians.
There are 684
physicians
in Rwanda, a total that is far below the 1,182
physicians
proposed by the Ministry of Health, and only 27% of the World Health Organization’s recommended minimum of 2,576
physicians.
Telemedicine applications will allow
physicians
to treat patients who are hundreds of miles away.
They see that immigrants tend to be qualified East Europeans, many of them physicians, while the number of Swedes registered as sick or in early retirement has underpinned a severe labor shortage.
Likewise, every year, Congress canceled “planned” cuts in payments to
physicians
that, if ever implemented, would drive doctors out of the Medicare system.
In part, they make them to keep their best
physicians.
Nations that make large investments in hospitals and
physicians
who are devoted to improving quality of care clearly expect to see improved patient outcomes.
Physicians
and nurses should be encouraged to work with new health practitioners to engage external stakeholders, such as schools, food companies, financial firms, and social services.
Not even
physicians
are immune to these influences; indeed, in some cases, they actually create the bias.
Researchers from the Commonwealth Fund recently reported that some high-income countries, including the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand, have made great strides in encouraging the use of electronic medical records (EMR) among primary-care
physicians.
For years, scientists, physicians, and civil-society actors have voiced concern over the lack of reliable, meaningful, and institutionalized investment in pandemic preparedness.
The gaps in these countries’ labor markets – from software specialists to
physicians
to home health aides – will be immense.
A cardinal principle of contemporary medical ethics is that patients have the right to make this type of decision, and that
physicians
are obligated to follow their wishes.
It typically means, as DeBakey experienced and as his
physicians
anticipated, an extended hospitalization marked by reliance on machines, multiple complications, and considerable suffering.
In this scenario, different players – Medicare and Medicaid, state and local governments, private insurers, physicians, and social entrepreneurs – collaborate to hammer out effective solutions that can be scaled with government revenues.
This coming flu season there will be a new twist:
physicians
will have to be aware that hidden among these patients could be a small number with SARS, a respiratory disease that is also likely to be seasonal and whose early symptoms are almost indistinguishable from those of the flu.
If more
physicians
had routine access to these kits, they could tell on the spot whether a patient had influenza and eliminate the need to treat him or her as a possible SARS patient.
Most important, governments, payers, and
physicians
must come together to test, support, and roll out the best and most cost-effective ideas.
Physicians
are bound by the Hippocratic Oath, which obliges them to do no harm and to uphold medical ethics.
For physicians, the idea of swearing an oath to act ethically goes back to Hippocrates.
Indeed, in Book II of The Wealth of Nations, Smith condemned as unproductive the labors of “churchmen, lawyers, physicians, men of letters of all kinds; players, buffoons, musicians, opera-singers, opera-dancers, etc.”
So she remained ignorant, as did her
physicians
– with possible ramifications for her clinical care.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Patients
Health
Medical
Patient
About
Which
There
Nurses
Would
Other
Doctors
After
Scientists
Could
Should
People
Drugs
Years
Workers